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while he pretended to be trying to see something, that of course was not there, at the top of a wave.

They were having a delightful morning, they lived in every moment of it, and wished it would never come to an end; still, when it did, there would be a delicious luncheon to go back to very large prawns, roast chicken and green peas, and an enormous dish of ripe figs, which both their souls loved. After all, Walter thought, the world was not a bad place, especially when you had a wife who adored you and thought that everything you did bore the stamp of genius.

The band was playing a waltz,' though to this day they do not know it. All manner of people were passing to and fro, but they did not notice them.

"I should like to stay here forever," Mrs. Hibbert said, with a sweet sigh of content. "Do you know, Walter," she went on suddenly, after a pause, “it will be four months to-morrow since we were married? Time seems to have flown."

stretched out a small hand covered with a black thread glove as she spoke, and held Florence's fingers affectionately in hers. Florence looked at her a little wonderingly. Aunt Anne was slight and old, nearly sixty perhaps. All over her face there were little lines that crossed and recrossed, and brauched off in every direction. She had grey hair, and small, dark eyes that blinked quickly and nervously; there appeared to be some trifling affection of the left eye, for now and then, as if by accident, it winked at you. The odd thing was that, in spite of her evident tendency to nervous excitement, her shabby black satin dress, almost threadbare shawl, and cheap gloves, there was an air of dignity about the spare old lady, and something like determination in her kindly voice that, joined to her impulsive tenderness, made you quickly understand she would be a very difficult person to oppose

"Dear boy," she said gently to Walter, "why didn't you write to me when you were married? You know how glad I should have been to hear of your happi

"By Jove! it really is a miracle what those four months have done with them-ness." selves," he answered, looking up for a mo- "Why didn't you write to me, Aunt ment; as if to be sure that Time was not Anne?" he asked, gaily turning the tables. a conjuror standing before him about to "Yes, I ought to have done so. You hand the four months from beneath a must forgive me, dears, for being so rehandkerchief, with a polite bow and the miss," she said, looking at them both, remark that they would have to be lived" and believe me that it was from no lack through at the ordinary rate.

A spare-looking old lady, dressed in black, passed by, but he did not notice her.

"You see," he went on, with his eyes fixed on a sailing boat in the distance, "if things were always going to be

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At the sound of his voice the lady in black, who was only a few yards off, stopped, listened, hesitated, and, turning back, stood before him. He recognized | her in a moment.

of affection. But," she went on quickly, "we must not waste our time. You are coming to Rottingdean with me, and at once. Mr. Baines is longing to see you both."

"But we can't go now, Aunt Anne," Walter declared in his kindest manner; "we must get back to the lodgings. We told them to have luncheon ready at one o'clock, and to-night we go home. Couldn't you come and lunch with us?"

you."

"But he has never seen me, Aunt Anne."

"My dear Walter," she said, with a "Aunt Anne!" he exclaimed. His look of dismay and in a voice that was voice was amiable, but embarrassed, as if almost pained, "what would your uncle he did not quite know what to do next. say? I could not possibly return without "My dear Walter," she said, with a sigh and in a tone of great relief, "I am so glad to find you; I went to your lodgings, I saw your name and address in the visitors' list yesterday, but you were out; then I thought I might find you here. And this is your wife? My dear Florence, I am so glad to see you.'

Till that moment Mrs. Walter Hibbert had never heard of the existence of Aunt Anne, but Aunt Anne had evidently heard of Mrs. Hibbert. She knew her Christian name, and called her by it as naturally as if she had been at her christening. She

"That is one reason why he would never forgive me if I did not take you back."

"But it is so far, we should be all day getting there," Walter objected a little helplessly, for he felt already that Aunt Anne would carry her point.

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you too well, my darling, to think you will refuse me."

Her manner had changed in a moment; she said the last words with soft triumph, and looked at Florence. The sight of the young wife seemed to be too much for her; there was something like a tear in the left eye, the one that winked, when she spoke again.

"I must give her a kiss,” she said tenderly, and putting out her arms she gathered the girl to her heart. "But we must make haste," she went on quickly, hurrying over the fag end of her embrace, as if she had not time to indulge in her feeling, much as she desired to do so. "Mr. Baines will wonder what has happened to us. He is longing to see you ;" and without their knowing it, she almost chased them along the pier.

Then Walter, thinking of the prawns and the chicken, and the large dish of ripe green figs, made a wild struggle to get free.

"But really, Aunt Anne," he said firmly, "we must go back to the lodgings. Come and lunch with us now, and let us go to see Mr. Baines another time; I dare say we shall be at Brighton again soon. We will make a point of coming now that we know you are here, won't we, Floggie?" and he appealed feebly to his wife.

“Yes, indeed we will,” Florence said. "Dear children," Aunt Anne laughed, "I shall not let you escape now that I have found you." There was an unexpected brightness in her manner, but there was no intention of letting them go.

"Besides, there may be important letters at the lodgings, and I ought to do a bit of work;" but there was evident invention in Walter's voice, and she did not slacken her pace. Still, as if she wanted him to know that she saw through his excuses, she looked at him reproachfully, and with a determination that did not falter.

"It would be impossible for me to return without you," she said; "he would never forgive me. Besides, dear children, you don't know what a pleasure it is to see you. I could not let you go just yet. My heart gave a bound as I recognized Walter's voice," she went on, turning to Florence; "he is so like what his dear father used to be. I knew him directly."

They were already by the turnstile. They felt helpless. The old lady with the thin shoulders and the black shawl loosely floating behind seemed to be their master; they were like children doing as they were told.

"Here is the fly. Get in, my darlings," she said triumphantly, and Florence meekly took her place. "Get in, dear Walter," she repeated with decision, "I will follow; get in," and he too obeyed. Another moment and they were going towards Rottingdean.

The old lady looked relieved and pleased when they were on their way.

"It is a lovely drive,” she said, “and it will do you far more good than sitting on the pier. I am so glad to have you with me, dear children." She seemed to delight in calling them children, and it was odd, but each time that she said the word it seemed to give her a stronger hold on them. She turned to Florence.

"Are your father and mother quite well, my dear?" she asked.

Walter put his hand on his wife's. "She only has a mother," he said gently.

Aunt Anne looked quite penitent. She winked with her left eye and was silent for a moment or two, almost as if she meditated shedding a tear for the defunct father of the niece by marriage whom she had never seen in her life before to-day. Suddenly she turned the subject so grotesquely that they nearly laughed.

"Are you fond of chocolates, my darling?"

"Yes" Florence hesitated a minute and then said softly:—

"Yes, Aunt Anne, very"- she had not had occasion to give the old lady any name in the few words she had spoken previously.

"Dear child, I knew you would be," Aunt Anne said, and from under her shawl she produced a box covered with white satin paper and having on its lid a very bright picture of a very smart lady. “I bought that box of chocolates for you as I came along. I thought Florence would be like the picture on the lid," she added, turning to her nephew; " and she is, don't you think so, Walter dear?"

"Yes, Aunt Anne, she is," he answered, and he looked fondly at his wife and drew up his lips a little bit in a manner that Florence knew meant, in the language only she and he in all the wide world understood, that in his thoughts he kissed her.

Aunt Anne was a dear old lady, Florence thought, and of course she liked, and always would like, any relation of Walter's; still, she did so wish that on this particular day, their last by the sea together, Aunt Anne had kept her distance. Walter was so pale when they left

Why should Mr. Baines be quoted, Florence wondered. She looked again an open sea, a misty horizon, a blue sky, and the sun shining. A fine sea-view, certainly, and a splendid day, but scenery was hardly the term to apply to the distance beside them.

"Is Mr. Baines very fond of the sea?" she asked. She saw that Aunt Anne was waiting for her to speak, and she said the first words that presented themselves.

town, but since Friday, with nothing to do | face when you looked at the sea. Mr. but to get brown in the sun, he had been Baines says it is a lovely view." looking better and handsomer every day, and this last one they had longed to enjoy in their own lazy way; and now all their little plans were spoilt. To-morrow he would be at his office; it was really too bad, though it was ungrateful to think it, perhaps, with the remembrance of Aunt Anne's embrace fresh upon her, and the box of chocolates on her lap. Still, after all, she felt justified, for she knew that Walter was raging inwardly, and that if they were alone he would use some short but very effective words to describe his own feeling in respect to the turning up of Aunt Anne. Only he was so good, so gentle, and considerate, that, no matter what his thoughts might be, she knew he would not let Aunt Anne feel how much her kind-you, my love?" Aunt Anne spoke in the ness bothered him. gentle but authoritative voice which was, as they had already found, difficult to resist.

Meanwhile, they jogged along in the open fly towards Rottingdean. A long, even road, with a view on the right of the open sea, on the left alternate high hedges and wide meadows. The grass on the cliffs was green; among the grass were little footpaths made by wandering feet that had diverged from the main road. Florence followed the little tracks with her eyes; she thought of footpaths like them far away, not by the sea, but among the hanging woods of Surrey. She and Walter had sauntered along them less than a year ago. She thought of home, of the dear mother busy with her household duties, making time in between them to write to the boys in India; of the dear, noisy boys who suddenly grew to be young men and vanished into the whirl of life; of the dirty old pony carriage in which she had loved to drive her sweetheart; and when she got to this point her thoughts came to a full stop to think more particularly of the pony. His name was Moses, and he had liked being kissed and eating sugar. She remembered, with a pang of self-reproach, that in the last months before her marriage she used to forget to kiss Moses, though she often stood absently stroking his patient nose. She had sometimes even forgotten his morning lump of sugar in the excitement of reading the letter that the early post never failed to bring.

"Are you fond of scenery, dear?" Aunt Anne asked.

With a start Florence looked round at the old lady, at Walter, at the shabby lining of the fly.

"Yes, very," she answered.

"Yes, my love, he delights in scenery. You must call him Uncle Robert, Florence. He would be deeply wounded to hear you say Mr. Baines. Neither he nor I could think of Walter's wife as anything but our niece. You will remember, won't

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Yes, Aunt Anne, of course I will if you wish it; it was only because as yet I do not know him."

"But you soon will know him, my love," the old lady answered confidently; "and when you do, you will feel that neither he nor I could think of Walter's wife except to love her. Dear child, how fond he will be of you." And she put her hand affectionately on Florence's while she turned to Walter and asked suddenly:

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Walter, dear, have you got a white silk handkerchief for your neck?"

He looked at her for a moment almost puzzled, wondering whether she wanted to borrow one, and if it was for a conjuring trick.

"No, Aunt Anne, I fear I have not."

Aunt Anne dived down into her pocket and pulled out a little soft packet. "I thought you wouldn't have one," she said joyfully, "so I bought this for you just now; and she tucked the little parcel into his hand. It took him by surprise, he did not know what to say. He felt like the schoolboy she seemed to take him for, and a schoolboy's awkwardness overtook him; he smiled, nodded mysteriously, and put the handkerchief into his pocket. His manner delighted Mrs. Baines.

"He is just the same," she said to Florence; "I remember him so well when he was only ten years old. He had the most lovely eyes I ever saw. Do you remember my going to see your father? Ah! we have reached the hill, that's why he's going so slowly," she exclaimed excitedly. "We shall be there in five minutes. Now

"I knew it by the expression of your we are close to the village. Drive through

the street, coachman," she called out, | overtaking her saw that the front door "past the church, and a little way on you opened into a room simply, almost poorly, will see a house standing back from the furnished, with many photographs dotted road with a long garden in front and a about the walls, and a curious arrangement white gate. Florence dear," she asked, of quartz and ferns in one corner. While still keeping her eyes fixed on the driver, Mrs. Baines stood irresolute, there came "do you like preserve?" round the house from the right a little shabby-looking maidservant. Her dress was dirty, and she wore a large cap on her untidy head.

"Like - do you mean jam?" Florence asked, bewildered by another sudden question.

"Yes, my love, preserve," Aunt Anne answered pointedly, as if she resented the use of the shorter word.

"Yes, I like it very much," her newly found niece said humbly.

"We have quantities of fruit in our garden, and have been preserving it all the week. It is not very firm yet, but you must have some to take back with you."

"I am afraid we shall hardly be able to carry it" Florence began timidly, feeling convinced that if she were made to carry jam to London it would be fatal to the rest of her luggage.

"I will pack it for you myself," Aunt Anne said firmly. She was watching the driver too intently to say more. She did not speak again till they had driven down the one street of Rottingdean, past the newly built cottages and the church, and appeared to be getting into a main road again. Then suddenly she rose triumphantly from her seat. "There it is, coachman, that little cottage to the left. Dear Walter — how pleased your uncle will be. Here it is, dears," and all her kindly face lighted up with satisfaction as they stopped before a small, whitewashed cottage with a long garden in front and a bed of lupins at the side. Florence noticed that the garden, stretching far behind, was full of fruit trees, and that a pear-tree rubbed against the sides of the house.

The old lady got out of the fly slowly, she handed out her niece and nephew; the latter was going to pay the driver, but she pushed away his hand, then stood for a moment feeling absently in her pocket. After a moment she looked up and said in an abstracted voice, "Walter dear, you must settle with the flyman when you go back to Brighton; he is paid by the hour and will wait for you, my darlings;" and she turned towards the gate. "Come," she said, "I must present you to your uncle. Robert," she called, "are you there?" She walked along the pathway with a quick, determined step a little in advance of her visitors; when she reached the house she stood still, looking in but hesitating to enter. Florence and Walter

"Emma," said Aunt Anne in the condescending voice of one who struggled, but unsuccessfully, to forget her own superior condition in life, "where is your master?"

"I don't know, mum, but I think he's tying up the beans."

"Have you prepared luncheon?" The girl looked up in surprise she evidently did not dare express, and answered in the negative.

"Then go and do so immediately." "But please, mum, what am I to put on the table?" asked the girl, bewildered.

"Put!" exclaimed the old lady, "why, the cold pie, and the preserved cranberries, of course, and the honey and the buns."

Florence thought that it sounded like the oddest meal in the world.

"I think we had better return, I do indeed, Aunt Anne, if you will kindly let us," urged Walter, thinking regretfully of the chicken.

Aunt Anne waved her hand.

"Walter," she answered grandly, "you shall not go until you have partaken of our hospitality. I wish it were a thousand times better than it is," she added, with a pathetic note in her voice that found their hearts directly.

Walter put his hand on her shoulder like the simple, affectionate fellow that he was, and Florence hastened to say heartily:

"It sounds delightful, dear Aunt Anne; it is only that we and then there came slouching round the left side of the house a tall, ungainly-looking man of about sixty, a man with a brown beard and brown trousers, carrying in his hand a newspaper. He looked at Walter and at Florence in almost stupid surprise, and turned from them with a grunt.

"Anne," he said crossly, "where have you been? I have wasted all my morning looking for you; you knew those scarlet runners wanted tying up, and the sunflowers trimming. Who are these?" he asked, nodding at his visitors as coolly as if they had been out of hearing; "and what is that fly doing at the gate?"

"Why, I have been to Brighton, of

course," Aunt Anne answered bravely, lifting her head and looking him in the face, but there was a quaver of something like fear in her voice; "I told you I was going; I went by the omnibus."

"What did you go to Brighton for? you were there only last week." He lowered his voice and asked again, "Who are these?"

on his face, as if he knew perfectly how awkward they felt.

"Sit down, Mrs. Hibbert," he said, nodding towards an ordinary chair and including Walter in the nod. "I dare say you'll be glad of your food before you look at specimens. I shall," and he gave a lumbering laugh. "I have done a hard morning's work."

"I am sure you must be very tired," Florence said politely, wishing Aunt Anne would return.

"Robert, I told you yesterday that Walter Hibbert's name was in the visitors' list in the paper, and that I was longing to see him and his wife," she answered He seemed to know her thoughts, and sharply, but still with dignity-it was answered them in an explanatory manner: doubtful which of the two was master-"Anne won't be long. She always dresses "so of course I went off this morning to fetch them. I knew how glad you would be to see them."

The maid inside, laying the cloth in the whitewashed sitting-room, stopped clattering the forks and spoons to hear what was going on and to look through the open window. Aunt Anne noticed it in a moment, and turning to her said sternly: "Emma, proceed with your work. I told you," she went on, again speaking to her husband, "that these dear children were at Brighton. I have brought them back, Robert, to introduce them to you. They have been looking forward to it."

He gave another grunt, and smiled an awkward smile that seemed forced from him, and shook his awkward shoulders.

"Oh, that's it," he said; "well, you had better come in and have something to eat," and he led the way into the cottage.

Aunt Anne entirely recovered herself the moment she was under her own roof. "He is so forgetful," she said softly, "but he has really been longing to see you;" and she touched his arm; "I told them how glad you would be to see them, Robert," she said appealingly, as if she felt quite certain that he would remember his gladness in a moment or two, and wondered if it was yet flowing into his heart. "Dear Florence, you must ask him to show you his botanical specimens; he has a wonderful collection."

"We will," said Walter good-humoredly. "And now you must excuse me for a few minutes, dears. I know how much your uncle will enjoy a talk with you," and, to the dismay of the Hibberts, Aunt Anne vanished, leaving them alone with the brown man.

Mr. Baines sat slowly down on the armchair, the only really comfortable one in the room, and stretched out his left leg in a manner that showed it was stiff. Then he looked at his visitors almost grimly, yet with a suggestion of odd amusement

before we have dinner. Great nonsense, living as we do; but it's no use my speaking. Do you make a long stay in Brighton, Mr. Hibbert?"

"No, we go back to town to-night." "A good thing," he said, with another awkward laugh; "Brighton is a horrible place to my mind, and the sooner one leaves it the better. That pier, with its band and set of idle people, with nothing else to do but to walk up and down; well, it's my opinion that railways have done a vast deal of mischief and mighty little good to make up for it. The same thing can be said of newspapers. What good do they do?"

Walter felt that this sudden turn upon the press was a little hard on him, but he looked up over his moustache with laughter in his eyes, and wondered what would come next. Florence was almost angry. Aunt Anne's husband was very rude, she thought, and she determined to come to the rescue.

"But you were reading a paper," she said, and tried to see the name of one that Mr. Baines had thrown down beside his chair.

"Oh, yes; I like to try to find out what mischief they are going to do next. If I had my way they should only be pub lished monthly, if at all. All they do is to try to set people by the ears."

"But they tell us the news."

"Well, and what better are we for that? I don't want to know that a man was hanged last week, and a prince will be married to-morrow; I only waste my time reading about them when I might be usefully employed minding my own business. Oh, here's Anne; now we had better go and eat."

With the aid of a stick he shuffled out of the chair and went towards the table. Walter made a feint of offering his help.

"I am all right once I am on my feet," said Mr. Baines.

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